

Moderator: F9K9
Looks like their is special clips that hold the fuel lines to the pump. Are they like the one on the fuel filter you just squeeze or do you need a tool?Sonoma GT wrote:My fuel pump finally died on my 2001 Crew Cab after 110,000 miles. I needed to fix it this weekend and could not find an OEM pump and didn’t want to wait to have one delivered. I know that the OEM pump is supposed to be the best and that cheap pumps won’t last so I thought I’d give this Bosch pump a try. It was not cheap at $345.00 but was the only pump that was available fast that I thought would be a high quality pump. I’ve never heard much about Bosch fuel pumps on here or other forums. The install kind of sucked because of all the rust but PB Blaster came through again. 4 ½ hours later it’s running fine again.
No special tools needed. Just the squeeze type.Looks like their is special clips that hold the fuel lines to the pump. Are they like the one on the fuel filter you just squeeze or do you need a tool?
You may want to consider the Delphi pump. It includes the new connector. The stock connector is part of a TSB dealing with fuel pump failures due to resistance in the smaller stock connector terminals.Lewis wrote:... I was looking for the best pump...
Should I replace with new clips or is it ok to use the old over?Sonoma GT wrote:No special tools needed. Just the squeeze type.Looks like their is special clips that hold the fuel lines to the pump. Are they like the one on the fuel filter you just squeeze or do you need a tool?
Chevy dealer here said the bravada only has one serviceable clip, the fuel supply, the return coupler is a part of the line and not available separate the third is a vent he said it just pushes on. Sunday afternoon it comes apart we'll see...F9K9 wrote:Jim,
I'd use the new clips but, you might want to wait until Brule resurfaces from Moab and it's limited communication resources.